Resumen:
Starting from a theological perspective, this dissertation explores the concept of alterity or
otherness, as developed by Emmanuel Lévinas, a French-Lithuanian Jewish philosopher,
outlining consequences for both an educative liberating reflection and praxis. It is an
encounter with the Ethics of Alterity as expressed by the love of wisdom of the Greeks, but
which has its meaning fertilized and nourished by the wisdom of love of the prophets. The
contribution this study intends to offer, possibly revealing something original, may be thus
announced: alterity states a pertinent wisdom aiming at the fruition of an ethical education, in
which the subject is called to an exodus, a coming out of oneself toward another. Hence the
sense of an education to the wisdom of love that covers the meaning of one‟s own freedom.
This research paid attention to the Word that resounds the clamor of the other who asks for
hospitality. Totality and Infinite, one of the masterpieces of the above named author, although
not exclusively, shall be the reference to the study which assumes hermeneutic
phenomenology as both its descriptive and interpretative path. However, it goes without
saying that the ethical levinasian priority overflows the boundaries of what the research
methodology may be. The thesis is made up of six chapters. The first deals with the concept
of alterity the way it is described in its correlation with the face of the other. In Lévinas‟
writings, there is a kind of twisting, a trauma, in which the reason of maieutics, of cogito, of
ontology, of totality, of the primacy of the ego are deeply questioned by the face that makes
itself proximity and announces the logos of the Infinite, ethics, fertility, hospitality. Thus we
can perceive the meaning of the exodus that has its development scrutinized within the second
chapter. Over and above the power of violence, war, exclusion, in short, of barbarism that
denies the other, Ethics sets forth the unheard of interpellation: I have witnessed the
affliction of my people (Ex 3.7). In the third chapter, alterity is confronted with the western
historical-cultural perspective, emphasizing the permanent interdiction of the other, especially
as relating to the face of the foreigner, the woman, the child, the young. Then, it is with the
face of the young that the fourth chapter deals, in this section being up to the current capitalist
culture of consumption, where there exists an appalling discarding of the human. Within this
context, starting in the fifth chapter, education is introduced as a possibility to incite the
ethical sensibility within the life dynamics of the human being. To meet the other is to meet a
master who questions my condition as subject, making an ethical teaching possible. Finally,
the last chapter, besides promoting the idea of an exodus pedagogy, presents an encounter of
the levinasian ethics with Paulo Freire‟s pedagogy. The Ethics of alterity meets in Freire with
an education that develops in the horizon of welcoming, hospitality, non-indifference, in
short, of subjectivity leavened by the norms of alterity.